Chapter 51:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 Song of Solomon Jeremiah
Isaiah 51
Complete Concise
This chapter is designed for the comfort and encouragement of
those that fear God and keep his commandments, even when they walk in darkness
and have no light. Whether it was intended primarily for the support of the
captives in Babylon is not certain, probably it was; but comforts thus generally
expressed ought not to be so confined. Whenever the church of God is in distress
her friends and well-wishers may comfort themselves and one another with these
words, I. That God, who raised his church at first out of nothing, will take
care that it shall not perish (v. 1-3). II. That the righteousness and salvation
he designs for his church are sure and near, very near and very sure (v. 4-6).
III. That the persecutors of the church are weak and dying creatures (v. 7, 8).
IV. That the same power which did wonders for the church formerly is now engaged
and employed for her protection and deliverance (v. 9-11). V. That God
himself, the Maker of the world, had undertaken both to deliver his people out
of their distress and to comfort them under it, and sent his prophet to assure
them of it (v. 12-16). VI. That, deplorable as the condition of the church now
was (v. 17-20), to the same woeful circumstances her persecutors and
oppressors should shortly be reduced, and worse (v. 21-23). The first three
paragraphs of this chapter begin with, "Hearken unto me," and they are
God's people that are all along called to hearken; for even when comforts are
spoken to them sometimes they "hearken not, through anguish of spirit"
(Ex. 6:9); therefore they are again and again called to hearken (v. 1, 4, 7).
The two other paragraphs of this chapter begin with "Awake, awake;" in
the former (v. 9) God's people call upon him to awake and help them; in the
latter (v. 17) God calls upon them to awake and help themselves.
Verses 1-3
Observe, 1. How the people of God are here described, to whom
the word of this consolation is sent and who are called upon to hearken to it,
v. 1. They are such as
follow after righteousness, such as are very
desirous and solicitous both to be justified and to be sanctified, are pressing
hard after this, to have the favour of God restored to them and the image of God
renewed on them. These are those
that seek the Lord, for it is only in
the say of righteousness that we can seek him with any hope of finding him. 2.
How they are here directed to look back to their original, and the smallness of
their beginning:
"Look unto the rock whence you were hewn" (the
idolatrous family in Ur of the Chaldees, out of which Abraham was taken, the
generation of slaves which the heads and fathers of their tribes were in Egypt);
"look unto
the hole of the pit out of which you were digged, as
clay, when God formed you into a people." Note, It is good for those that
are privileged by a new birth to consider what they were by their first birth,
how they were
conceived in iniquity and shapen in sin. That which is
born
of the flesh is flesh. How hard was that rock out of which we were hewn,
unapt to receive impressions, and how miserable
the hole of that pit out of
which we were digged! The consideration of this should fill us with low
thoughts of ourselves and high thoughts of divine grace. Those that are now
advanced would do well to remember how low they began (v. 2):
"Look unto
Abraham your father, the father of all the faithful, of all that follow
after the righteousness of faith as he did (Rom. 4:11),
and unto Sarah that
bore you, and whose daughters you all are as long as you do well. Think how
Abraham was
called alone, and yet was
blessed and
multiplied;
and let that encourage you to depend upon the promise of God even when a
sentence of death seems to be upon all the means that lead to the performance of
it. Particularly let it encourage the captives in Babylon, though they are
reduced to a small number, and few of them left, to hope that yet they shall
increase so as to replenish their own land again." When Jacob is very
small, yet he is not so small as Abraham was, who yet became father of many
nations. "Look unto Abraham, and see what he got by trusting in the promise
of God, and take example by him to follow God with an implicit faith." 3.
How they are here assured that their present seedness of tears should at length
end in a harvest of joys, v. 3. The church of God on earth, even the gospel
Zion, has sometimes had her deserts and waste places, many parts of the church,
through either corruption or persecution, made like a wilderness, unfruitful to
God or uncomfortable to the inhabitants; but God will find out a time and way to
comfort Zion, not only by speaking comfortably to her, but by acting
graciously for her. God has comforts in store even for the
waste places
of his church, for those parts of it that seem not regarded or valued. (1.) He
will make them fruitful, and so give them cause to rejoice; her wildernesses
shall put on a new face, and look pleasant as Eden, and abound in all good
fruits,
as the garden of the Lord. Note, It is the greatest comfort of
the church to be made serviceable to the glory of God, and to be as his garden
in which he delights. (2.) He will make them cheerful, and so give them hearts
to rejoice. With the
fruits of righteousness, joy and gladness shall be found
therein; for the more holiness men have, and the more good they do, the more
gladness they have. And where there is gladness, to their satisfaction, it is
fit that there should be thanksgiving, to God's honour; for whatever is the
matter of our rejoicing ought to be the matter of our thanksgiving; and the
returns of God's favour ought to be celebrated with the voice of melody, which
will be the more melodious when God gives
songs in the night, songs in
the desert.
Verses 4-8
Both these proclamations, as I may call them, end alike with an
assurance of the perpetuity of God's righteousness and his salvation; and
therefore we put them together, both being designed for the comfort of God's
people. Observe,
I. Who they are to whom this comfort belongs:
"My
people, and
my nation, that I have set apart for myself, that own me
and are owned by me." Those are God's people and his nation who are
subject to him as their King and their God, pay allegiance to him, and put
themselves under his protection accordingly. They are a people who
know
righteousness, who not only have the means of knowledge, and to whom
righteousness is made known, but who improve those means, and are able to form a
right judgment of truth and falsehood, good and evil. And, as they have good
heads, so they have good hearts, for they have the law of God in them, written
and ruling there. Those God owns for his people
in whose hearts his law is.
Even those who know righteousness, and have the law of God in their hearts, may
yet be in great distress and sorrow, and loaded with reproach and contempt; but
their God will comfort them with the righteousness they know and the law they
have in their hearts.
II. What the comfort is that belongs to God's people. 1. That
the gospel of Christ shall be preached and published to the world:
A law
shall proceed from me, an evangelical law, the law of Christ, the law of
faith, ch. 2:3. This law is his judgment; for it is that law of liberty by which
the world shall be governed and judged. This shall not only go forth, but shall
continue and rest, it shall take firm footing and deep root in the world. It
shall rest, not only for the benefit of the Jews, who had the first notice of
it, but
for a light of the people of other nations. It is this law, this
judgment, that we are required to hearken and give ear to, at our peril; for how
shall we escape if we neglect it and turn a deaf ear to it? When a law proceeds
from God,
he that has ears to hear, let him hear. 2. That this law and
judgment shall bring with them righteousness and salvation, shall open a ready
way to the children of men, that they may be justified and saved, v. 5. These
are called
God's righteousness and
his salvation, because of his
contriving and bringing them about. The former is a righteousness which he will
accept for us and accept us for, and a righteousness which he will work in us
and graciously accept of. The latter is the
salvation of the Lord, for it
arises from him and terminates in him. Observe, There is no salvation without
righteousness; and, wherever there is the
righteousness of God, there
shall be his salvation. All those, and those only, that are justified and
sanctified shall be glorified. 3. That this righteousness and salvation shall
very shortly appear:
My righteousness is near. It is near in time;
behold, all things are now ready. It is near in place, not far to seek, but the
word is nigh us, and Christ in the word, righteousness in the word, Rom. 10:8.
My
salvation has gone forth. The decree has gone forth concerning it; it shall
as certainly be introduced as if it had gone forth already, and the time for it
is at hand. 4. That this evangelical righteousness and salvation shall not be
confined to the Jewish nation, but shall be extended to the Gentiles;
My arms
shall judge the people. Those that will not yield to the judgments of God's
mouth shall be crushed by the judgments of his hand. Some shall thus be judged
by the gospel, for
for judgment Christ came into this world; but others,
and those of
the isles, shall wait upon him, and bid his gospel, and the
commands as well as the comforts of it, welcome. It was a comfort to God's
people, to his nation, that multitudes should be added to them, and the increase
of their number should be the increase of their strength and beauty. It is
added,
And on my arm shall they trust, that
arm of the Lord which
is revealed in Christ, ch. 53:1. Observe, God's arm shall judge the people
that are impenitent, and yet on his arm shall others trust and be saved by it;
for it is to us as we make it, a savour of life or of death. 5. That this
righteousness and salvation
shall be for ever, and shall never be
abolished, v. 8. It is an everlasting righteousness that the Messiah brings in
(Dan. 9:24), an eternal redemption that he is the author of, Heb. 5:9. As it
shall spread through all the nations of the earth, so it shall last through all
the ages of the world. We must never expect any other way of salvation, any
other covenant of peace or rule of righteousness, than what we have in the
gospel, and what we have there shall continue to the end, Mt. 28:20. It is for
ever; for the consequences of it shall be to eternity, and by this law of
liberty men's everlasting state will be determined. This perpetuity of the
gospel and the blessed things it brings in is illustrated by the fading and
perishing of this world and all things in it. Look up to the visible heavens
above, which have continued hitherto, and seem likely to continue, but they
shall
vanish like smoke that soon spends itself and disappears; they
shall be rolled like a scroll, and their lights shall fall like leaves in
autumn. Look down to the earth beneath; that abides too for a short
ever
(Eccl. 1:4), but it shall
wax old like a garment that will be the worse
for wearing;
and those that dwell therein, all the inhabitants of the
earth, even those that seem to have the best settlement in it,
shall die in
like manner: the soul shall, as to this world, vanish like smoke, and the
body be thrown by like a garment waxen old. They shall be easily crushed (Job
4:19), and no loss of them. But when
heaven and earth pass away, when all
flesh and the glory of it wither as grass, the
word of the Lord endures for
ever, and
not one iota or tittle of that shall fall to the ground.
Those whose happiness is bound up in Christ's righteousness and salvation will
have the comfort of it when time and days shall be no more.
III. What use they are to make of this comfort. If God's
righteousness and salvation are near to them, then let them
not fear the
reproach of men, of mortal miserable men, nor be
afraid of their
revilings or spiteful taunts, theirs who bid you sing them the songs of
Zion, or who ask you, in scorn,
Where is now your God? Let not those who
embrace the gospel righteousness be afraid of those who will call them
Beelzebub,
and will say all manner of evil against them falsely. Let them not be afraid of
them; let them not be disturbed by these opprobrious speeches, nor made uneasy
by them, as if they would be the ruin of their reputation and honour and they
must for ever lie under the load of them. Let them not be afraid of their
executing their menaces, nor be deterred thereby from their duty, nor frightened
into any sinful compliances, nor driven to take any indirect courses for their
own safety. Those can bear but little for Christ that cannot bear a hard word
for him. Let us not fear the reproach of men; for, 1. They will be quickly
silenced (v. 8):
The moth shall eat them up like a garment, ch. 50:9.
The
worm shall eat them like wool, or woollen cloth. If we have the approbation
of a living God, we may despise the censure of dying men; the matter is not
great what those say of us who must shortly be food for worms. Or it intimates
the judgments of God with which they shall be visited, with which they shall be
consumed, for their malice against the people of God; they shall be slowly and
silently, but effectually destroyed, when God shall come to reckon with them
for
all their hard speeches, Jude 14, 15. 2. The cause we suffer for cannot be
run down. The falsehood of their reproaches will be detected, but truth shall
triumph, and the righteousness of religion's injured cause shall be for ever
plain. Clouds darken the sun, but give no obstruction to his progress.
Verses 9-16
In these verses we have,
I. A prayer that God would, in his providence, appear and act
for the deliverance of his people and the mortification of his and their
enemies.
Awake, awake! put on strength, O arm of the Lord! v. 9. The arm
of the Lord is Christ, or it is put for God himself, as Ps. 44:23.
Awake! why
sleepest thou? He that keeps Israel neither slumbers nor sleeps; but, when
we pray that he would awake, we mean that he would make it to appear that he
watches over his people and is always awake to do them good. The arm of the Lord
is said to awake when the power of God exerts itself with more than ordinary
vigour on his people's behalf. When a hand or arm is benumbed we say, It is
asleep; when it is stretched forth for action, It awakes. God needs not to be
reminded nor excited by us, but he gives us leave thus to be humbly earnest with
him for such appearances of his power as will be for his own praise.
"Put
on strength," that is, "put forth strength: appear in thy
strength, as we appear in the clothes we put on," Ps. 21:13. The church
sees her case bad, her enemies many and mighty, her friends few and feeble; and
therefore she depends purely upon the strength of God's arm for her relief.
"Awake,
as in the ancient days," that is, "do for us now as thou didst for
our fathers formerly, repeat
the wonders they told us of," Jdg.
6:13.
II. The pleas to enforce this prayer. 1. They plead precedents,
the experiences of their ancestors, and the great things God had done for them.
"Let the arm of the Lord be made bare on our behalf; for it has done great
things formerly in defence of the same cause, and we are sure it is neither
shortened nor weakened. It did wonders against the Egyptians, who enslaved and
oppressed God's son, his first-born; it
cut Rahab to pieces with one
direful plague after another,
and wounded Pharaoh,
the dragon, the
Leviathan (as he is called, Ps. 74:13, 14); it gave him his death's wound. It
did wonders for Israel.
It dried up the sea, even
the waters of the
great deep, as far as was requisite to open
a way through the sea
for
the ransomed to pass over," v. 10. God is never at a loss for a way to
accomplish his purposes concerning his people, but will either find one or make
one. Past experiences, as they are great supports to faith and hope, so they are
good pleas in prayer.
Thou hast; wilt thou not? Ps. 85:1-6. 2. They plead
promises (v. 11):
And the redeemed of the Lord shall return, that is (as
it may be supplied),
thou hast said, They shall, referring to ch. 35:10,
where we find this promise, that
the redeemed of the Lord, when they are
released out of their captivity in Babylon,
shall come with singing unto
Zion. Sinners, when they are brought out of the slavery of sin into the
glorious liberty of God's children, may come singing, as a bird got loose out
of the cage. The souls of believers, when they are delivered out of the prison
of the body, come to the heavenly Zion with singing. Then this promise will have
its full accomplishment, and we may plead it in the mean time. He that designs
such joy for us at last will he not work such deliverances for us in the mean
time as our case requires? When the saints come to heaven they
enter into the
joy of their Lord; it crowns their heads with immortal honour; it fills
their hearts with complete satisfaction.
They shall obtain that
joy
and gladness which they could never obtain in this vale of tears. In this
world of changes it is a short step from joy to sorrow, but in that world
sorrow
and mourning shall flee away, never to return or come in view again.
III. The answer immediately given to this prayer (v. 12):
I,
even, I, am he that comforteth you. They prayed for the operations of his
power; he answers them with the consolations of his grace, which may well be
accepted as an equivalent. If God do not wound the dragon, and dry the sea, as
formerly, yet, if he comfort us in soul under our afflictions, we have no reason
to complain. If God do not answer immediately
with the saving strength of his
right hand, we must be thankful if he answer us, as an angel himself was
answered (Zec. 1:13),
with good words and comfortable words. See how God
resolves to comfort his people:
I, even I, will do it. He had ordered his
ministers to do it (ch. 40:1); but, because they cannot reach the heart, he
takes the work into his own hands:
I, even I, will do it. See how he
glories in it; he takes it among the titles of his honour to be
the God that
comforts those that are cast down; he delights in being so. Those whom God
comforts are comforted indeed; nay, his undertaking to comfort them is comfort
enough to them.
1. He comforts those that were in fear; and fear has torment,
which calls for comfort. The fear of man has a snare in it which we have need of
comfort to preserve us from. He comforts the timorous by chiding them, and that
is no improper way of comforting either others or ourselves:
Why art thou
cast down, and why disquieted? v. 12, 13. God, who comforts his people,
would not have them disquiet themselves with amazing perplexing fears of the
reproach of men (v. 7), or of their growing threatening power and greatness, or
of any mischief they may intend against us or our people. Observe,
(1.) The absurdity of those fears. It is a disparagement to us
to give way to them:
Who art thou, that thou shouldst be afraid? In the
original, the pronoun is feminine,
Who art thou, O woman! unworthy the
name of a man? Such a weak and womanish thing it is to give way to perplexing
fears. [1.] It is absurd to be in such dread of a dying man. What!
afraid of
a man that shall die, shall certainly and shortly die,
of the son of man
who shall be made as grass, shall wither and be trodden down or eaten up?
The greatest men, and the most formidable, that are
the terror of the mighty
in the land of the living, are
but men (Ps. 9:20) and shall
die
like men (Ps. 81:7), are but grass sprung out of the earth, cleaving to it,
and retiring again into it. Note, We ought to look upon every man as a man that
shall die. Those we admire, and love, and trust to, are men that shall die; let
us not therefore delight too much in them nor depend too much upon them. Those
we fear we must look upon as frail and mortal, and consider what a foolish thing
it is for the servants of the living God to be afraid of dying men, that are
here to-day and gone tomorrow. [2.] It is absurd to
fear continually every
day (v. 13), to put ourselves upon a constant rack, so as never to be easy,
nor to have any enjoyment of ourselves. Now and then a danger may be imminent
and threatening, and it may be prudent to fear it; but to be always in a toss,
jealous of dangers at every step, and to tremble at the shaking of every leaf,
is to make ourselves all our lifetime
subject to bondage (Heb. 2:15), and
to bring upon ourselves that sore judgment which is threatened, Deu. 28:66, 67.
Thou
shalt fear, day and night. [3.] It is absurd to fear beyond what there is
cause: "Thou art
afraid of the fury of the oppressor. It is true,
there is an oppressor, and he is furious, and he designs, it may be, when he has
an opportunity, to do thee a mischief, and it will be thy wisdom therefore to
stand upon thy guard; but thou art afraid of him,
as if he were ready to
destroy, as if he were just now going to cut thy throat, and as if there
were no possibility of preventing it." A timorous spirit is thus apt to
make the worst of every thing, and to apprehend the danger greater and nearer
than really it is. Sometimes God is pleased at once to show us the folly of so
doing:
"Where is the fury of the oppressor? It is gone in an
instant, and the danger is over ere thou art aware." His heart is turned,
or his hands are tied.
Pharaoh king of Egypt is but a noise, and the king
of Babylon no more. What has become of all the furious oppressors of God's
Israel, that hectored them, and threatened them, and were a terror to them? they
passed away, and, lo, they were not; and so shall these.
(2.) The impiety of those fears: "Thou art
afraid of a
man that shall die, and forgettest the Lord thy Maker, who is also the Maker
of all the world, who
has stretched forth the heavens and laid the
foundations of the earth, and therefore has all the hosts and all the powers
of both at his command and disposal." Note, Our inordinate fear of man is a
tacit forgetfulness of God. When we disquiet ourselves with the fear of man we
forget that there is a God above him, and that the greatest of men have no power
but what is given them from above; we forget the providence of God, by which he
orders and overrules all events according to the counsel of his own will; we
forget the promises he has made to protect his people, and the experiences we
have had of his care concerning us, and his seasonable interposition for our
relief many a time, when we thought the oppressor ready to destroy; we forget
our Jehovah-jirehs, monuments of mercy in the mount of the Lord. Did we remember
to make God our fear and our dread, we should not be so much afraid as we are of
the frowns of men, ch. 8:12, 13. Happy is the man that fears God always, Prov.
28:14; Lu. 12:4, 5.
2. He comforts those that were in bonds, v. 14, 15. See here,
(1.) What they do for themselves:
The captives exile hastens that he may be
loosed and may return to his own country, from which he is banished; his
care is
that he may not die in the pit (not die a prisoner, through the
inconveniences of his confinement), and that
his bread should not fail,
either the bread he should have to keep him alive in prison or that which should
bear his charges home; his stock is low, and therefore he hastens to be loosed.
Now some understand this as his fault. He is distrustfully impatient of delays,
cannot wait God's time, but thinks he is undone and must die in the pit if he
be not released immediately. Others take it to be his praise, that when the
doors are thrown open he does not linger, but applies himself with all diligence
to procure his discharge. And then it follows,
But I am the Lord thy God,
which intimates, (2.) What God will do for them, even that which they cannot do
for themselves. God has all power in his hand to help the captive exiles; for he
has
divided the sea, when the roaring of its waves was more frightful
than any of the impotent menaces of proud oppressors. He has
stilled or
quieted
the sea, so some think it should be read, Ps. 65:7; 89:9. This is not only a
proof of what God can do, but a resemblance of what he has done, and will do,
for his people; he will find out a way to still the threatening storm, and bring
them safely into the harbour.
The Lord of hosts is his name, his name for
ever, the name by which his people have long known him. And, as he is able to
help them, so he is willing and engaged to do it; for he is
thy God, O
captive-exile! thine in covenant. This is a check to the desponding captives.
Let them not conclude that they must either be loosed immediately or die in the
pit; for he that is the Lord of hosts can relieve them when they are brought
ever so low. It is also an encouragement to the diligent captives, who, when
liberty is proclaimed, are willing to lose no time; let them know that the Lord
is their God, and, while they thus strive to help themselves, they may be sure
he will help them.
3. He comforts all his people who depended upon what the
prophets said to them in the name of the Lord, and built their hopes upon it.
When the deliverances which the prophets spoke of either did not come so soon as
they looked for them or did not come up to the height of their expectation they
began to be cast down in their own eyes; but, as to this, they are encouraged
(v. 16) by what God says to his prophet, not to this only, but to all his
prophets, nor to this, or them, principally, but to Christ, the great prophet.
It is a great satisfaction to those to whom the message is sent to hear the God
of truth and power say to his messenger, as he does here,
I have put my words
in thy mouth, that by them
I may plant the heavens. God undertook to
comfort his people (v. 12); but still he does it by his prophets, by his gospel;
and, that he may do it by these, he here tells us, (1.) That his word in them is
very true. He owns what they have said to be what he had directed and enjoined
them to say:
"I have put my words in thy mouth, and therefore he
that receives thee and them receives me." This is a great stay to our
faith, that Christ's doctrine was not his, but his that sent him, and that the
words of the prophets and apostles were God's own words, which he put into
their mouths. God's Spirit not only revealed to them the things themselves
they spoke of, but dictated to them the words they should speak (2 Pt. 1:21; 1
Co. 2:13); so that these are the true sayings of God, of a God that cannot lie.
(2.) That it is very safe: I have
covered thee in the shadow of my hand
(as before, ch. 49:2), which speaks the special protection not only of the
prophets, but of their prophecies, not only of Christ, but of Christianity, of
the gospel of Christ; it is not only the faithful word of God which the prophets
deliver to us, but it shall be carefully preserved till it have its
accomplishment for the use of the church, notwithstanding the restless
endeavours of the powers of darkness to extinguish this light. They shall
prophesy
again (Rev. 10:11), though not in their persons, yet in their writings,
which God has always
covered in the shadow of his hand, preserved by a
special providence, else they would have been lost ere this. (3.) That this
word, when it comes to be accomplished, will be very great and will not fall
short of the pomp and grandeur of the prophecy:
"I have put my words in
thy mouth, not that by the performance of them I may plant a nation, or
found a city, but
that I may plant the heavens and lay the foundations of the
earth, may do that for my people which will be a new creation." This
must look as far forward as to the great work done by the gospel of Christ and
the setting up of his holy religion in the world. As God by Christ made the
world at first (Heb. 1:2), and by him formed the Old-Testament church (Zec.
6:12), so by him, and the words put into his mouth, he will set up, [1.] A new
world, will again plant the heavens and found the earth. Sin having put the
whole creation into disorder, Christ's taking away the sin of the world put
all into order again.
Old things have passed away, all things have become
new; things in heaven and things on earth are reconciled, and so put into a
new posture, Col. 1:20. Through him, according to the promise,
we look for
new heavens and a new earth (2 Pt. 3:13), and to this the prophets bear
witness. [2.] He will set up a new church, a New-Testament church:
He will
say unto Zion, Thou art my people. The gospel church is called
Zion
(Heb. 12:22) and
Jerusalem (Gal. 4:26); and, when the Gentiles are
brought into it, it shall be said unto them,
You are my people. When God
works great deliverances for his church, and especially when he shall complete
the salvation of it in the great day, he will thereby own that poor despised
handful to be his people, whom he has chosen and loved.
Verses 17-23
God, having awoke for the comfort of his people, here calls upon
them to awake, as afterwards, ch. 52:1. It is a call to awake not so much out of
the sleep of sin (though that also is necessary in order to their being ready
for deliverance) as out of the stupor of despair. When the inhabitants of
Jerusalem were in captivity they, as well as those who remained upon the spot,
were so overwhelmed with the sense of their troubles that they had no heart or
spirit to mind any thing that tended to their comfort or relief; they were as
the disciples in the garden,
sleeping for sorrow (Lu. 22:45), and
therefore, when the deliverance came, they are said to have been
like those
that dream, Ps. 136:1. Nay, it is a call to awake, not only from sleep, but
from death, like that to the dry bones to live, Eze. 37:9. "Awake, and look
about thee, that thou mayest see the day of thy deliverance dawn, and mayest be
ready to bid it welcome. Recover thy senses; sink not under thy load, but stand
up, and bestir thyself for thy own help." This may be applied to the
Jerusalem that was in the apostle's time, which is said to have been
in
bondage with her children (Gal. 4:25), and to have been under the power of
a
spirit of slumber (Rom. 11:8); they are called to awake, and mind the things
that belonged to their everlasting peace, and then the cup of trembling should
be taken out of their hands, peace should be spoken to them, and they should
triumph over Satan, who had blinded their eyes and lulled them asleep. Now,
I. It is owned that Jerusalem had long been in a very deplorable
condition, and sunk into the depths of misery.
1. She had lain under the tokens of God's displeasure. He had
put into her hand
the cup of his fury, that is, her share of his
displeasure. The dispensations of his providence concerning her had been such
that she had reason to think he was angry with her. She had provoked him to
anger most bitterly, and was made to taste the bitter fruits of it. The cup of
God's fury is, and will be, a
cup of trembling to all those that have
it put into their hands: damned sinners will find it so to eternity. It is said
(Ps. 75:8) that
the dregs of the cup, the loathsome sediments in the
bottom of it,
all the wicked of the earth shall wring them out, and drink
them; but here Jerusalem, having made herself as the wicked of the earth, is
compelled to wring them out and drink them; for wherever there has been a cup of
fornication, as there had been in Jerusalem's hand when she was idolatrous,
sooner or later there will be a cup of fury, a cup of trembling. Therefore
stand
in awe and sin not.
2. Those that should have helped her in her distress failed her,
and were either unable or unwilling to help her, as might have been expected, v.
18. She is intoxicated with the cup of God's fury, and, being so, staggers,
and is very unsteady in her counsels and attempts. She knows not what she says
or does, much less knows she what to say or do; and, in this unhappy condition,
of
all the sons that she has brought forth and brought up, that she was borne
and educated (and there were many famous ones, for of Zion it was said
that
this and that man were born there, Ps. 87:5),
there is none to guide her,
none to take her by the hand to keep her either from falling or from shaming
herself, to lend either a hand to help her out of her trouble or a tongue to
comfort her under it. Think it not strange if wise and good men are disappointed
in their children, and have not that succour from them which they expected, but
those that were arrows in their hand prove arrows in their heart, when Jerusalem
herself has none of all her sons, prince, priest, nor prophet, that has such a
sense either of duty or gratitude as to help her when she has most need of help.
Thus they complain, Ps. 74:9. There is
none to tell us how long. Now that
which aggravated this disappointment was, (1.) That her trouble was very great,
and yet there was none to pity or help her:
These two things have come unto
thee (v. 19), to complete thy desolation and destruction, even
the famine
and the sword, two sore judgments, and very terrible. Or the two things were
the
desolation and destruction by which the city was wasted and the
famine and sword by which the citizens perished. Or the two things were the
trouble itself (made up of desolation, destruction, famine, and sword) and her
being helpless, forlorn, and comfortless, under it. "Two sad things indeed,
to be in this woeful case, and to have none to pity thee, to sympathize with
thee in thy griefs, or to help to bear the burden of thy cares, to have none to
comfort thee, by suggesting that to thee which might help to alleviate thy grief
or doing that for thee which might help to redress thy grievances." Or
these two things that had come upon Jerusalem are the same with the two things
that were afterwards to come upon Babylon (ch. 47:9),
loss of children and
widowhoodpiteous case, and yet, "when thou hast brought it upon
thyself by thy own sin and folly,
who shall be sorry for thee?a case
that calls for comfort, and yet, when thou art froward under thy trouble,
frettest, and makest thyself uneasy,
by whom shall I comfort thee?"
Those that will not be counselled cannot be helped. (2.) That those who should
have been her comforters were their own tormentors (v. 20):
They have
fainted, as quite dispirited and driven to despair; they have no patience in
which to keep possession of their own souls and the enjoyment of themselves, nor
any confidence in God's promise, by which to keep possession of the comfort of
that. They throw themselves upon the ground, in vexation at their troubles, and
there
they lie at the head of all the streets, complaining to all that
pass by (Lam. 1:12), pining away for want of necessary food; there they lie like
a wild bull in a net, fretting and raging, struggling and pulling, to
help themselves, but entangling themselves so much the more, and making their
condition the worse by their own passions and discontents. Those that are of a
meek and quiet spirit are, under affliction, like a dove in a net, mourning
indeed, but silent and patient. Those that are of a froward peevish spirit are
like a wild bull in a net, uneasy to themselves, vexatious to their friends, and
provoking to their God:
They are full of the fury of the Lord, the rebuke of
our God. God is angry with them, and contends with them, and they are full
of that only, and take no notice of his wise and gracious designs in afflicting
them, never enquire wherefore he contends with them, and therefore nothing
appears in them but anger at God and quarrelling with him. They are displeased
at God for the dispensations of his providence concerning them, and so they do
but make bad worse. This had long been Jerusalem's woeful case, and God took
cognizance of it. But,
II. It is promised that Jerusalem's troubles shall at length
come to an end, and be transferred to her persecutors (v. 21):
Nevertheless
hear this, thou afflicted. It is often the lot of God's church to be
afflicted, and God has always something to say to her then which she will do
well to hearken to. "Thou art
drunken, not as formerly
with wine,
not with the intoxicating cup of Babylon's whoredoms and idolatries, but with
the cup of affliction. Know then, for thy comfort," 1. "That the Lord
Jehovah is thy Lord and thy God, for all this." It is expressed
emphatically (v. 22):
"Thus saith thy Lord, the Lord, and thy Godthe
Lord, who is able to help thee, and has wherewithal to relieve thee,
thy
Lord, who has an incontestable right to thee, and will not alienate it,thy
God, in covenant with thee, and who has undertaken to make thee happy."
Whatever the distresses of God's people may be, he will not disown his
relation to them, nor have they lost their interest in him and in his promise.
2. "That he is the God
who pleads the cause of his people, as their
patron and protector, who takes what is done against them a done against
himself." The cause of God's people, and of that holy religion which they
profess, is a righteous cause, otherwise the righteous God would not appear for
it; yet it may for a time be run down, and seem as if it were lost. But God will
plead it, either by convincing the consciences or confounding the mischievous
projects of those that fight against it. He will plead it by clearing up the
equity and excellency of it to the world and by giving success to those that act
in defence of it. It is his own cause; he has espoused it, and therefore will
plead it with jealousy. 3. That they should shortly take leave of their troubles
and bid a final farewell to them:
"I will take out of thy hand the cup
of trembling, that bitter cup; it shall pass from thee." Throwing away
the cup of trembling will not do, nor saying, "We will not, we cannot,
drink it;" but, if we patiently submit, he that put it into out hands will
himself take it out of our hands. Nay, it is promised,
"Thou shalt no
more drink it again. God has let fall his controversy with thee, and will
not revive the judgment." 4. That their persecutors and oppressors should
be made to drink of the same bitter cup of which they had drunk so deeply, v.
23. See here, (1.) How insolently they had abused and trampled upon the people
of God:
They have said to thy soul, to thee, to thy life,
Bow down,
that we may go over. Nay, they have said it to thy conscience, taking a
pride and pleasure in forcing thee to worship idols. Herein the New-Testament
Babylon treads in the steps of that old oppressor, tyrannizing over men's
consciences, giving law to them, putting them upon the rack, and compelling them
to sinful compliances. Those that set up an infallible head and judge, requiring
an implicit faith in his dictates and obedience to his commands, do in effect
say to men's souls,
Bow down, that we may go over, and they say it with
delight. (2.) How meanly the people of God (having by their sin lost much of
their courage and sense of honour) truckled to them:
Thou hast laid thy body
as the ground. Observe, The oppressors required souls to be subjected to
them, that every man should believe and worship just as they would have them.
But all they could gain by their threats and violence was that people laid their
bodies on the ground; they brought them to an external and hypocritical
conformity, but conscience cannot be forced, nor is it mentioned to their praise
that they yielded thus far. But observe, (3.) How justly God will reckon with
those who have carried it so imperiously towards his people:
The cup of
trembling shall be put into their hand. Babylon's case shall be as bad as
ever Jerusalem's was. Daniel's persecutors shall be thrown into Daniel's
den; let them see how they like it. And the Lord is known by these judgments
which he executes.
Chapter 51:
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